Susan Westwood caught on video while harassing two black women waiting for AAA to fix their car in North Carolina. (Facebook)

Here we go again.

A racist white woman has been caught on video harassing two black women who say they were simply waiting for auto assistance outside their North Carolina apartment complex.

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Leisa and Mary Garris were waiting for AAA to jumpstart their car when a sloppy, barely coherent woman identified by reports as Susan Westwood approached them to ask, among other things, why they were there.

“Hi, how are you? I'm hot, I'm beautiful. I'm 51, and what are we going to talk about tonight? Being hot? Being beautiful? Being white?” the woman asked the sisters, who remained calm. Westwood continued: “This is Myers Park, SouthPark, B****. Why are you up in here hanging out?”

The Garris sisters filmed Westwood, who felt a need to claim she made $125,000 a year before repeating “I’m white” three more times.

MOUTH DROPPING VIDEOS...Never thought this would happen to my sister and I right here in Charlotte, NC (Southpark/Myers...

Westwood no longer has an income. Her employer, Charter Communications, released a statement to an ABC News affiliate in Charlotte, N.C., claiming Westwood’s behavior is a “blatant violation” of their code of conduct and her “employment with the company has been terminated, effective immediately.”

Charlotte-Mecklenburg police have issued four summonses for Westwood who also threatened to “Bring out my concealed weapon” before reminding the victims, “This is North Carolina by the way.”

Video of that incident is reminiscent of numerous similar recent incidents caught on tape, including one that hit close to home earlier this month when a white woman in a Flatbush, Brooklyn, bodega accused a 9-year-old black boy of sexual assault when he brushed against her while shopping with his mom. She called the police.

Days later, video of a white St. Louis woman blocking a black man from entering an apartment building where they both lived went viral. She, too, lost her job in the aftermath of that incident. That woman worked for the apartment complex.

A short time after that, a white woman on a golf cart was filmed calling the police on a black man who was cheering on his son at a soccer game in Florida. That woman deemed the man’s behavior “threatening.” No arrests were made.